The Pamphlet Collection of Sir Robert Stout: Volume 53
Ingersoll's — Latest Oration on Thomas Paine
Contents
- [introduction]
- Truth about the Dead
- A Friend of Man
- One of the Mainstays of Liberty p. 2
- The Best Political Writer that Ever Lived
- "These are the Times that Try Men's Souls."
- A Splenid Monument Covered with Lies.' p. 3
- "The Rights of Man."
- "The World is My Country, and to Do Good My Religion." p. 4
- Filled with a Real Love for Mankind
- A Vote Against his Own Life
- Splendid Sentiments:
- The Messenger of Death Passed by p. 5
- Take a Look behind the Altar
- The Church has Violated Even his Grave
- You Must Believe p. 6
- He Believed in One God, and in No More
- Whale, Jonah, and All
- He Used None that have been Refuted p. 7
- We Attack their Creed
- He was Unacquainted with the Dead Languages
- In Force in Maryland p. 8
- The Church was Ignorant, Bloody, and Relentless
- Some One had to Lead the Way p. 9
- Paine Struck the First Grand Blow
- His Crime p. 10
- Where Others Worshipped, He Wept and Scorned
- Why I Hate it
- Is it Nothing to Free the Mind? p. 11
- Liberty?
- We Need Free Bodies and Free Minds p. 12
- Death Touched his Tired Heart
- Did Thomas Paine Recant?
- The Letter p. 13
- An Old Revolutionary Soldier
- Hates a Patriot?
- Are All Unbelievers
- The First Great Abolitionist p. 14